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Mr noAttitude Wednesday, January 02, 2013 02:16 AM

is it enough to answer this kind of questions ?
 
AOA guyz ... !!!

I hope you all are doing great .. !!!

There is a question in 2010 psychology paper-I,

Define perception and sensation and explain how the five senses specially vision and hearing operate?

I am not good at all in remembering things even the definitions, when i looked the above question i couldn't figure out what exactly it requires some one to give the answer. I have some how tried to answer this question, now i need your comments to please let me know is it enough to answer this kind of questions or did i get it right and answered accordingly ?


[B][U]Perception[/U][/B]
The process by which people translate sensory impressions into a coherent and unified view of the world around them. Though necessarily based on incomplete and unverified (or unreliable) information, perception is equated with reality for most practical purposes and guides human behavior in general


[B][U]Sensation[/U][/B]
The process by which stimulation of a sensory receptor produces neural impulses that the
brain interprets as a sound, a visual image, an odor, a taste, a pain, or other sensory image. Sensation represents the first series of steps in processing of incoming information.



The are commonly five know organs of the living organisims particulary a Human Being


The Five Sense Organs in Human Beings

The sense organs — eyes, ears, tongue, skin, and nose — help to protect the body. The human sense organs contain receptors that relay information through sensory neurons to the appropriate places within the nervous system.

Each sense organ contains different receptors.

General receptors are found throughout the body because they are present in skin, visceral organs (visceral meaning in the abdominal cavity), muscles, and joints.

Special receptors include chemoreceptors (chemical receptors) found in the mouth and nose, photoreceptors (light receptors) found in the eyes, and mechanoreceptors found in the ears.
[I][B]
Oooh, that smell: Olfaction[/B][/I]
Olfactory cells line the top of your nasal cavity. On one end, olfactory cells have cilia — hair-like attachments — that project into the nasal cavity. On the other end of the cell, are olfactory nerve fibers, which pass through the ethmoid bone and into the olfactory bulb. The olfactory bulb is directly attached to the cerebral cortex of your brain.

As you breathe, anything that is in the air that you take in enters your nasal cavity: hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, dust, pollen, chemicals. You don’t “smell” air or dust or pollen, but you can smell chemicals. The olfactory cells are chemoreceptors, which means the olfactory cells have protein receptors that can detect subtle differences in chemicals.

The chemicals bind to the cilia, which generate a nerve impulse that is carried through the olfactory cell, into the olfactory nerve fiber, up to the olfactory bulb and to your brain. Your brain determines what you are smelling. If you are sniffing something that you haven’t experienced before, you need to use another sense, such as taste or sight, to make an imprint in your brain’s memory.

[I][B]Mmm, mmm, good: Taste[/B][/I]
The senses of smell and taste work closely together. If you cannot smell something, you cannot taste it, either. Taste buds on your tongue contain chemoreceptors that work in a similar fashion to the chemoreceptors in the nasal cavity. However, the chemoreceptors in the nose will detect any kind of smell, whereas there are four different types of taste buds, and each detects different types of tastes: sweet, sour, bitter, and salty.

A common misconception is that the little bumps on your tongue are the taste buds. As with all misconceptions, this idea is wrong, too. The little bumps on your tongue are called papillae, and the taste buds actually lie down in the grooves between each papilla.

Foods contain chemicals, and when you put something into your mouth, the taste buds in your tongue can detect what chemicals you are ingesting. Each taste bud has a pore at one end with microvilli sticking out of the pore, and sensory nerve fibers attached to the other end. Chemicals from food bind to the microvilli, generating a nerve impulse that is carried through the sensory nerve fibers and eventually to the brain.

[I][B]Now hear this: Sound[/B][/I]
The ear not only is the organ of hearing, but it also is responsible for maintaining equilibrium — or balance. To maintain equilibrium, the ear must detect movement. To hear, the ear must respond to mechanical stimulation by sound waves.

The outer ear is the external opening to the ear canal. Sound waves are shuttled through the ear canal to the middle ear. The eardrum sets the mechanics in motion:

When a sound wave hits the eardrum, the eardrum moves tiny bones — the malleus, incus, and stapes — which subsequently move.

This movement is picked up by the mechanoreceptors in the inner ear, which exist on hair cells containing cilia between the end of the semicircular canals and the vestibule.

When the cilia move, the cells create an impulse that is sent through the cochlea to the eighth cranial nerve, which carries the impulse to the brain.

The brain then interprets the information as a specific sound.

The fluid within the semicircular canals of the inner ear moves, and that movement is ultimately detected by the cilia. When the fluid doesn’t stop moving, you can develop motion sickness. The cilia transmit impulses to the brain about angular and rotational movement, as well as movement through vertical and horizontal planes, which helps your body to keep its balance.

[I][B]Seeing is believing: Sight[/B][/I]
When you look at an eye, the iris is the colored part. The iris actually is a pigmented muscle that controls the size of the pupil, which dilates to allow more light into the eye or contracts to allow less light into the eye. The iris and pupil are covered by the cornea.

Behind the pupil is an anterior chamber. Behind the anterior chamber is the lens. The ciliary body contains a small muscle that connects to the lens and the iris. The ciliary muscle changes the shape of the lens to adjust for far or near vision. The lens flattens to see farther away, and it becomes rounded for near vision. The process of changing the shape of the lens is called accommodation. People lose the ability of accommodation as they grow older, prompting the need for glasses.

Behind the lens of the eye is the vitreous body, which is filled with a gelatinous material called vitreous humor. This substance gives shape to the eyeball and also transmits light to the very back of the eyeball, where the retina lies. The retina contains photoreceptors, which detect light.

Two types of sensors detect light:

Rods detect motion. The rods work harder in low light.

Cones detect fine detail and color. The cones work best in bright light. There are three types of cones: one that detects blue, one that detects red, and one that detects green. Color blindness occurs when one type of cone is lacking.

When light strikes the rods and cones, nerve impulses are generated. The impulse travels to two types of neurons: first to bipolar cells and then to ganglionic cells. The axons of ganglionic cells form the optic nerve.

The optic nerve carries the impulse directly to the brain. Approximately 150 million rods are in a retina, but only 1 million ganglionic cells and nerve fibers are there, which means that many more rods can be stimulated than there are cells and nerve fibers to carry the impulses. Your eye must combine “messages” before the impulses are sent to the brain.
[I][B]
A touchy-feely subject: Touch[/B][/I]
The skin contains general receptors. These receptors can detect touch, pain, pressure, and temperature. Throughout your skin, you have all four of these receptors interspersed. Skin receptors generate an impulse when activated, which is carried to the spinal cord and then to the brain.

The skin is not the only tissue in the body to have receptors, however. Your organs, which are made of tissues, also have receptors. Joints, ligaments, and tendons contain proprioceptors, which detect the position and movement of the limbs.

amna firdous Wednesday, January 02, 2013 09:12 AM

Ok & Enough !!

ultimate Wednesday, January 02, 2013 09:17 AM

[SIZE="4"][COLOR="DarkRed"][COLOR="Indigo"]w salam

your ans is pretty good

but

i think explain vision and hearing only with little explanition of structure of eye and ear with lable diagram and no need to explain rest of senses in detail.

"The are commonly five know organs of the living organisims particulary a Human Being" dont make this blunder.there are five senses in humans.no need to mention organs.

regards[/COLOR][/COLOR][/SIZE]

Mr noAttitude Wednesday, January 02, 2013 03:21 PM

[QUOTE=ultimate;535899][SIZE="4"][COLOR="DarkRed"][COLOR="Indigo"]w salam

your ans is pretty good

but

i think explain vision and hearing only with little explanition of structure of eye and ear with lable diagram and no need to explain rest of senses in detail.

"The are commonly five know organs of the living organisims particulary a Human Being" dont make this blunder.there are five senses in humans.no need to mention organs.

regards[/COLOR][/COLOR][/SIZE][/QUOTE]


oh that was a mistake i meant to write five sense organs, that are known commonly though there are some other too, any how [B]thanks bro[/B] for your comments, i was really looking for this kind of answer because when i was preparing the structure of eye, i found it quiet lenthy so i had to figure out what should be the technique, now i have understand that whatsoever, answer should address the question at every cost with every possible detail... !!!!

Syeda Bukhari Wednesday, January 02, 2013 04:19 PM

[QUOTE=Mr noAttitude;535873]

Define perception and sensation and explain how the five senses specially vision and hearing operate?

[/QUOTE]

First of all define perception and sensation then explain all the five senses briefly and then give the details of vision and hearing alongwith the structures of eye and ear with labelled diagrams.

Regards!

Alyy Wednesday, January 02, 2013 06:09 PM

[QUOTE=Mr noAttitude;536040]oh that was a mistake i meant to write five sense organs, that are known commonly though there are some other too, any how [B]thanks bro[/B] for your comments, i was really looking for this kind of answer because when i was preparing the structure of eye, i found it quiet lenthy so i had to figure out what should be the technique, now i have understand that whatsoever, answer should address the question at every cost with every possible detail... !!!![/QUOTE]

[B][SIZE="4"][SIZE="3"]which book are you consulting? Presentation is nice and content was clear and to the point.[/SIZE][/SIZE][/B]

Mr noAttitude Wednesday, January 02, 2013 11:59 PM

[QUOTE=Alyy;536120][B][SIZE="4"][SIZE="3"]which book are you consulting? Presentation is nice and content was clear and to the point.[/SIZE][/SIZE][/B][/QUOTE]


Dear, I'm consulting Sarfraz Bajwa's Book but I am not satisfied with its content, the detail in that book about various topics is not well organised, as far as this question is concerned, I took the material from different sources on Internet, anyhow I am going go buy deblij for physical geography :(

Mr noAttitude Thursday, January 03, 2013 02:08 PM

Dear I'm consulting R.feldmen book for both papers of psychology as it covers almost 80% of the syllabus.


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